The Coinbase UK investment services authorisation, granted by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), marks the exchange’s most ambitious move in the country yet, allowing it to offer equities, derivatives and crypto under a single roof for the first time.
The approval was granted to Coinbase’s UK entity, which already holds an e-money licence and a crypto registration. That existing entity is registered with the FCA as CB Payments Ltd. The new authorisation sits on top of those existing permissions and adds investment services to what Coinbase can do here.
UK CEO Keith Grose announced the authorisation, and Coinbase described it as ‘the most comprehensively regulated crypto player in the market,’ according to PYMNTS. The company posted on social media that it was ‘the biggest ever expansion of Coinbase UK’s product suite.’
What the Coinbase UK Investment Services Authorisation Covers
For retail customers, the practical change is access to equities: Coinbase says UK users will be able to trade stocks on the platform for the first time. Institutional and advanced traders gain access to a broader range of derivatives, including crypto, equity and commodity perpetual futures (contracts with no fixed expiry date that track an underlying asset’s price).
This matters partly because derivatives are not a niche product. The Block reports that Coinbase cited derivatives as representing approximately 75% of the global crypto market by volume, which is why regulatory permission to offer them carries weight for the company’s growth story.
The UK is already Coinbase’s largest international market, according to the company’s own blog. Winning investment services permission here is therefore a different scale of opportunity from its European licences.
How This Fits Coinbase’s Broader Expansion
The UK authorisation follows a run of regulatory wins across other markets. In August 2024, Coinbase completed the acquisition of BUX’s Cyprus unit, renaming it Coinbase Financial Services Europe and securing a Cyprus Investment Firm (CIF) licence under MiFID II (the EU’s main framework for investment services regulation). Finance Magnates reports that the over-the-counter futures Coinbase subsequently launched in Europe include contracts that combine Magnificent Seven stocks with crypto exchange-traded funds, available across 26 European countries. Details of the BUX Cyprus acquisition are covered by LiquidityFinder.
In February 2026, Coinbase had already rolled out stock and ETF trading to all users in the United States, so the UK launch follows an established template rather than an untested one.
The company’s stated direction is to pull all of these products into one platform: crypto trading, equities, derivatives, stablecoin payments, savings, borrowing and eventually tokenised real-world assets. Savings and borrowing products are already live in the UK.
Coinbase also points to a regulatory tailwind. The UK’s broader crypto regulatory regime is scheduled to take effect in October 2027. The company says the investment services authorisation lets UK customers access traditional products before that framework arrives, giving Coinbase a head start in building the habit.
For context on why that matters, Yahoo Finance notes that the FCA’s 2024 Wave 5 consumer research estimated around seven million UK adults, or roughly 12% of the adult population, held cryptoassets. The same research found that a quarter of non-holders said they would be more likely to buy crypto if the sector were properly regulated.
Those two numbers together sketch the opportunity: a large existing customer base that already has a Coinbase account, and a meaningful pool of cautious potential customers who are waiting for exactly the kind of regulated environment Coinbase is now building. Whether the company can convert that potential into activity on its platform is the test that follows.
The key date to watch is October 2027, when the UK’s full crypto regime comes into force. If Coinbase builds retail equity and derivatives habits before then, it will be better placed than rivals that wait for the rulebook to settle before expanding.

